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TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2018
$1.50
rz4980-v10
Call 08 8586 3133 or visit gjgardner.com.au
237 Renmark Ave, Renmark email riverland@gjgardner.com.au
GJG17RIV0005
Call 08 8586 3133 or visit gjgardner.com.au
237 Renmark Ave, Renmark email riverland@gjgardner.com.au
GJG17RIV0005
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Give us a call or drop in for a chat today.
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Make me accountable, Tim tells Riverland
THE RIVERLAND kick-started
the countdown to this year’s
Special Olympics National Games
yesterday, a week before the
opening ceremony in Adelaide.
Berri hosted the first of 12
Law Enforcement Torch Runs,
with law enforcement officers
and Special Olympic athletes
travelling 1400km across South
Australia for the event.
Yesterday’s run departed from
Berri Oval at 12.40pm, followed
by an hour-long ceremony in
front of the Berri Hotel, conclud-
ing at 2pm.
Torch run participants, includ-
ing a number of Riverland
Special School students, were
greeted by a community barbe-
cue hosted by Coles Berri, with
gold coin donations supporting
the Special Olympics event.
FULL STORY PAGE 7
Riverland launches Special Olympics
Riverland Special School student
Jasmine Adams and Berri police
officer Naomi Weatherald with the
lighted torch during yesterday’s Law
Enforcement Torch Run in Berri.
PHOTO: Christian Longobardi
PROMISES,
PROMISES
PAUL MITCHELL
TIM Whetstone has urged
Riverlanders to hold him account-
able for his pre-election promises.
Prior to his March 17 re-elec-
tion, the Member for Chaffey
promised funding for both a local
ice rehabilitation program and a
Riverland food and wine centre
feasibility study, while also pledg-
ing to reinstate community legal
services and make earlier water
allocation announcements.
Mr Whetstone has since been
made a minister in the new
Marshall Liberal Government, but
said Chaffey voters should demand
he deliver on any promises made to
locals.
“All the pledges and prom-
ises prior to the election will be
upheld,” Mr Whetstone said.
“Prior to the election we talked
about the food and wine centre, the
ice rehab, irrigation allocation sce-
narios and reinstating community
legal services.
“Now it’s up to the people of
Chaffey to keep me to account,
which they will, because without
my electorate I’m not here.”
Mr Whetstone – the new
Minister for Agriculture and
Regional Development – also said
he intended continuing his push to
maintain and improve police ser-
vices in the Riverland, particularly
in Renmark.
“Yes, that’s another commitment
I’ll make,” he said. “I’ll be
working with the Police Minister
to ensure we have adequate
frontline services, whether it be
police, education, health or (other)
government services.
Continued page 4
Tim’s to-do list
Get elected
Become minister
Sor t water allocations
Establish ice rehab program
Staff police station
Investigate wine and food centre
Make jam for Premier